Zzzzzzzebra !!

Thanks Bob and you are correct !! The Roger Williams Park Zoo in Providence, RI.

It seems if you want to eliminate the Zoo elements (fences, feeding stations, etc.) you have to shoot closeups or look for that very hard to find angle which has the right light and a view of the animal other than his/her rear end. Although, I did get a nice rear view of the elephant !! ;-)

Regards....Roger
R.E. ... Another great closeup! As you may know, I'm a fan of
shooting in the zoo as well. You are making that B-300 more
tempting every day. I look forward to more of you animal shots.
Uhhhhh... you did shoot him in the zoo didn't you??? ;-)

--
Bob 'MacTarheel'
Olympus CAMEDIA C-2100 Ultra Zoom
http://www.pbase.com/mactarheel/galleries
'Proud to support pbase'
--'The only time I ever said no to a drink was when I mis-understood the question !' Will Sinclair http://www.pbase.com/rewatson/galleriesOly 3OOOZOly 21OOUZ
 
R.E.Watson wrote:
It seems if you want to eliminate the Zoo elements (fences, feeding
stations, etc.) you have to shoot closeups or look for that very
hard to find angle which has the right light and a view of the
animal other than his/her rear end.
You are right about the zoom and eliminating unwanted background. Here is an example from one of my NC Zoological Park shots.
With partial zoom... http://www.pbase.com/image/1202275
With full 10x zoom... http://www.pbase.com/image/1202276

It really makes a difference in photo results.

--Bob 'MacTarheel'Olympus CAMEDIA C-2100 Ultra Zoom http://www.pbase.com/mactarheel/galleries 'Proud to support pbase'
 

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